8.6. Dependencies between the library and other packages
If a package contains a binary or library which links to a shared library, we must ensure that, when the package is installed on the system, all of the libraries needed are also installed. These dependencies must be added to the binary package when it is built, since they may change based on which version of a shared library the binary or library was linked with even if there are no changes to the source of the binary (for example, symbol versions change, macros become functions or vice versa, or the binary package may determine at compile-time whether new library interfaces are available and can be called). To allow these dependencies to be constructed, shared libraries must provide either a symbols
file or a shlibs
file. These provide information on the package dependencies required to ensure the presence of interfaces provided by this library. Any package with binaries or libraries linking to a shared library must use these files to determine the required dependencies when it is built. Other packages which use a shared library (for example using dlopen()
) should compute appropriate dependencies using these files at build time as well.
The two mechanisms differ in the degree of detail that they provide. A symbols
file documents, for each symbol exported by a library, the minimal version of the package any binary using this symbol will need. This is typically the version of the package in which the symbol was introduced. This information permits detailed analysis of the symbols used by a particular package and construction of an accurate dependency, but it requires the package maintainer to track more information about the shared library.
A shlibs
file, in contrast, only documents the last time the library ABI changed in any way. It only provides information about the library as a whole, not individual symbols. When a package is built using a shared library with only a shlibs
file, the generated dependency will require a version of the shared library equal to or newer than the version of the last ABI change. This generates unnecessarily restrictive dependencies compared to symbols
files if none of the symbols used by the package have changed. This, in turn, may make upgrades needlessly complex and unnecessarily restrict use of the package on systems with older versions of the shared libraries.
shlibs
files also only support a limited range of library SONAMEs, making it difficult to use shlibs
files in some unusual corner cases. 9
symbols
files are therefore recommended for most shared library packages since they provide more accurate dependencies. For most C libraries, the additional detail required by symbols
files is not too difficult to maintain. However, maintaining exhaustive symbols information for a C++ library can be quite onerous, so shlibs
files may be more appropriate for most C++ libraries. Libraries with a corresponding udeb must also provide a shlibs
file, since the udeb infrastructure does not use symbols
files.
A shlibs
file represents an SONAME as a library name and version number, such as libfoo VERSION
, instead of recording the actual SONAME. If the SONAME doesn’t match one of the two expected formats (libfoo-VERSION.so
or libfoo.so.VERSION
), it cannot be represented.
8.6.1. Generating dependencies on shared libraries
When a package that contains any shared libraries or compiled binaries is built, it must run dpkg-shlibdeps
on each shared library and compiled binary to determine the libraries used and hence the dependencies needed by the package. 10 To do this, put a call to dpkg-shlibdeps
into your debian/rules
file in the source package. List all of the compiled binaries, libraries, or loadable modules in your package. 11 dpkg-shlibdeps
will use the symbols
or shlibs
files installed by the shared libraries to generate dependency information. The package must then provide a substitution variable into which the discovered dependency information can be placed.
If you are creating a udeb for use in the Debian Installer, you will need to specify that dpkg-shlibdeps
should use the dependency line of type udeb
by adding the -tudeb
option. 12 If there is no dependency line of type udeb
in the shlibs
file, dpkg-shlibdeps
will fall back to the regular dependency line.
dpkg-shlibdeps
puts the dependency information into the debian/substvars
file by default, which is then used by dpkg-gencontrol
. You will need to place a ${shlibs:Depends}
variable in the Depends
field in the control file of every binary package built by this source package that contains compiled binaries, libraries, or loadable modules. If you have multiple binary packages, you will need to call dpkg-shlibdeps
on each one which contains compiled libraries or binaries. For example, you could use the -T
option to the dpkg
utilities to specify a different substvars
file for each binary package. 13
For more details on dpkg-shlibdeps
, see its manual page.
We say that a binary foo
directly uses a library libbar
if it is explicitly linked with that library (that is, the library is listed in the ELF NEEDED
attribute, caused by adding -lbar
to the link line when the binary is created). Other libraries that are needed by libbar
are linked indirectly to foo
, and the dynamic linker will load them automatically when it loads libbar
. A package should depend on the libraries it directly uses, but not the libraries it only uses indirectly. The dependencies for the libraries used directly will automatically pull in the indirectly-used libraries. dpkg-shlibdeps
will handle this logic automatically, but package maintainers need to be aware of this distinction between directly and indirectly using a library if they have to override its results for some reason. 14
dpkg-shlibdeps
will use a program like objdump
or readelf
to find the libraries and the symbols in those libraries directly needed by the binaries or shared libraries in the package.
The easiest way to call dpkg-shlibdeps
correctly is to use a package helper framework such as debhelper. If you are using debhelper, the dh_shlibdeps
program will do this work for you. It will also correctly handle multi-binary packages.
dh_shlibdeps
from the debhelper
suite will automatically add this option if it knows it is processing a udeb.
Again, dh_shlibdeps
and dh_gencontrol
will handle everything except the addition of the variable to the control file for you if you’re using debhelper, including generating separate substvars
files for each binary package and calling dpkg-gencontrol
with the appropriate flags.
A good example of where this helps is the following: We could update libimlib
with a new version that supports a new revision of a graphics format called dgf (but retaining the same major version number) and depends on a new library package libdgf4 instead of the older libdgf3. If we used ldd
to add dependencies for every library directly or indirectly linked with a binary, every package that uses libimlib
would need to be recompiled so it would also depend on libdgf4 in order to retire the older libdgf3 package. Since dependencies are only added based on ELF NEEDED
attribute, packages using libimlib
can rely on libimlib
itself having the dependency on an appropriate version of libdgf
and do not need rebuilding.
8.6.2. Shared library ABI changes
Maintaining a shared library package using either symbols
or shlibs
files requires being aware of the exposed ABI of the shared library and any changes to it. Both symbols
and shlibs
files record every change to the ABI of the shared library; symbols
files do so per public symbol, whereas shlibs
files record only the last change for the entire library.
There are two types of ABI changes: ones that are backward-compatible and ones that are not. An ABI change is backward-compatible if any reasonable program or library that was linked with the previous version of the shared library will still work correctly with the new version of the shared library. 15 Adding new symbols to the shared library is a backward-compatible change. Removing symbols from the shared library is not. Changing the behavior of a symbol may or may not be backward-compatible depending on the change; for example, changing a function to accept a new enum constant not previously used by the library is generally backward-compatible, but changing the members of a struct that is passed into library functions is generally not unless the library takes special precautions to accept old versions of the data structure.
ABI changes that are not backward-compatible normally require changing the SONAME
of the library and therefore the shared library package name, which forces rebuilding all packages using that shared library to update their dependencies and allow them to use the new version of the shared library. For more information, see Run-time shared libraries. The remainder of this section will deal with backward-compatible changes.
Backward-compatible changes require either updating or recording the minimal-version for that symbol in symbols
files or updating the version in the dependencies in shlibs
files. For more information on how to do this in the two formats, see The symbols File Format and The shlibs File Format. Below are general rules that apply to both files.
The easy case is when a public symbol is added. Simply add the version at which the symbol was introduced (for symbols
files) or update the dependency version (for shlibs
) files. But special care should be taken to update dependency versions when the behavior of a public symbol changes. This is easy to neglect, since there is no automated method of determining such changes, but failing to update versions in this case may result in binary packages with too-weak dependencies that will fail at runtime, possibly in ways that can cause security vulnerabilities. If the package maintainer believes that a symbol behavior change may have occurred but isn’t sure, it’s safer to update the version rather than leave it unmodified. This may result in unnecessarily strict dependencies, but it ensures that packages whose dependencies are satisfied will work properly.
A common example of when a change to the dependency version is required is a function that takes an enum or struct argument that controls what the function does. For example:
enum library_op { OP_FOO, OP_BAR };
int library_do_operation(enum library_op);
If a new operation, OP_BAZ
, is added, the minimal-version of library_do_operation
(for symbols
files) or the version in the dependency for the shared library (for shlibs
files) must be increased to the version at which OP_BAZ
was introduced. Otherwise, a binary built against the new version of the library (having detected at compile-time that the library supports OP_BAZ
) may be installed with a shared library that doesn’t support OP_BAZ
and will fail at runtime when it tries to pass OP_BAZ
into this function.
Dependency versions in either symbols
or shlibs
files normally should not contain the Debian revision of the package, since the library behavior is normally fixed for a particular upstream version and any Debian packaging of that upstream version will have the same behavior. In the rare case that the library behavior was changed in a particular Debian revision, appending ~
to the end of the version that includes the Debian revision is recommended, since this allows backports of the shared library package using the normal backport versioning convention to satisfy the dependency.
An example of an “unreasonable” program is one that uses library interfaces that are documented as internal and unsupported. If the only programs or libraries affected by a change are “unreasonable” ones, other techniques, such as declaring Breaks
relationships with affected packages or treating their usage of the library as bugs in those packages, may be appropriate instead of changing the SONAME. However, the default approach is to change the SONAME for any change to the ABI that could break a program.
8.6.3. The symbols
system
In the following sections, we will first describe where the various symbols
files are to be found, then the symbols
file format, and finally how to create symbols
files if your package contains a shared library.
8.6.3.1. The symbols
files present on the system
symbols
files for a shared library are normally provided by the shared library package as a control file, but there are several override paths that are checked first in case that information is wrong or missing. The following list gives them in the order in which they are read by dpkg-shlibdeps
. The first one that contains the required information is used.
debian/*/DEBIAN/symbols
During the package build, if the package itself contains shared libraries with symbols
files, they will be generated in these staging directories by dpkg-gensymbols
(see Providing a symbols file). symbols
files found in the build tree take precedence over symbols
files from other binary packages.
These files must exist before dpkg-shlibdeps
is run or the dependencies of binaries and libraries from a source package on other libraries from that same source package will not be correct. In practice, this means that dpkg-gensymbols
must be run before dpkg-shlibdeps
during the package build. 16
/etc/dpkg/symbols/package.symbols.arch
and /etc/dpkg/symbols/package.symbols
Per-system overrides of shared library dependencies. These files normally do not exist. They are maintained by the local system administrator and must not be created by any Debian package.
symbols
control files for packages installed on the system
The symbols
control files for all the packages currently installed on the system are searched last. This will be the most common source of shared library dependency information. These files can be read with dpkg-query --control-show package symbols
.
Be aware that if a debian/shlibs.local
exists in the source package, it will override any symbols
files. This is the only case where a shlibs
is used despite symbols
files being present. See The shlibs files present on the system and The shlibs system for more information.
An example may clarify. Suppose the source package foo
generates two binary packages, libfoo2
and foo-runtime
. When building the binary packages, the contents of the packages are staged in the directories debian/libfoo2
and debian/foo-runtime
respectively. (debian/tmp
could be used instead of one of these.) Since libfoo2
provides the libfoo
shared library, it will contain a symbols
file, which will be installed in debian/libfoo2/DEBIAN/symbols
, eventually to be included as a control file in that package. When dpkg-shlibdeps
is run on the executable debian/foo-runtime/usr/bin/foo-prog
, it will examine the debian/libfoo2/DEBIAN/symbols
file to determine whether foo-prog
’s library dependencies are satisfied by any of the libraries provided by libfoo2
. Since those binaries were linked against the just-built shared library as part of the build process, the symbols
file for the newly-built libfoo2
must take precedence over a symbols
file for any other libfoo2
package already installed on the system.
8.6.3.2. The symbols
File Format
The following documents the format of the symbols
control file as included in binary packages. These files are built from template symbols
files in the source package by dpkg-gensymbols
. The template files support a richer syntax that allows dpkg-gensymbols
to do some of the tedious work involved in maintaining symbols
files, such as handling C++ symbols or optional symbols that may not exist on particular architectures. When writing symbols
files for a shared library package, refer to dpkg-gensymbols(1) for the richer syntax.
A symbols
may contain one or more entries, one for each shared library contained in the package corresponding to that symbols
. Each entry has the following format:
library-soname main-dependency-template
[| alternative-dependency-template]
[...]
[* field-name: field-value]
[...]
symbol minimal-version[ id-of-dependency-template]
To explain this format, we’ll use the zlib1g
package as an example, which (at the time of writing) installs the shared library /usr/lib/libz.so.1.2.3.4
. Mandatory lines will be described first, followed by optional lines.
library-soname
must contain exactly the value of the ELF SONAME
attribute of the shared library. In our example, this is libz.so.1
. 17
main-dependency-template
has the same syntax as a dependency field in a binary package control file, except that the string #MINVER#
is replaced by a version restriction like (>= version)
or by nothing if an unversioned dependency is deemed sufficient. The version restriction will be based on which symbols from the shared library are referenced and the version at which they were introduced (see below). In nearly all cases, main-dependency-template
will be package #MINVER#
, where package is the name of the binary package containing the shared library. This adds a simple, possibly-versioned dependency on the shared library package. In some rare cases, such as when multiple packages provide the same shared library ABI, the dependency template may need to be more complex.
In our example, the first line of the zlib1g
symbols
file would be:
libz.so.1 zlib1g #MINVER#
Each public symbol exported by the shared library must have a corresponding symbol line, indented by one space. symbol is the exported symbol (which, for C++, means the mangled symbol) followed by @
and the symbol version, or the string Base
if there is no symbol version. minimal-version
is the most recent version of the shared library that changed the behavior of that symbol, whether by adding it, changing its function signature (the parameters, their types, or the return type), or changing its behavior in a way that is visible to a caller. id-of-dependency-template
is an optional field that references an alternative-dependency-template
; see below for a full description.
For example, libz.so.1
contains the symbols compress
and compressBound
. compress
has no symbol version and last changed its behavior in upstream version 1:1.1.4
. compressBound
has the symbol version ZLIB_1.2.0
, was introduced in upstream version 1:1.2.0
, and has not changed its behavior. Its symbols
file therefore contains the lines:
compress@Base 1:1.1.4
compressBound@ZLIB_1.2.0 1:1.2.0
Packages using only compress
would then get a dependency on zlib1g (>= 1:1.1.4)
, but packages using compressBound
would get a dependency on zlib1g (>= 1:1.2.0)
.
One or more alternative-dependency-template
lines may be provided. These are used in cases where some symbols in the shared library should use one dependency template while others should use a different template. The alternative dependency templates are used only if a symbol line contains the id-of-dependency-template
field. The first alternative dependency template is numbered 1, the second 2, and so forth. 18
Finally, the entry for the library may contain one or more metadata fields. Currently, the only supported field-name is Build-Depends-Package
, whose value lists the library development package on which packages using this shared library declare a build dependency. If this field is present, dpkg-shlibdeps
uses it to ensure that the resulting binary package dependency on the shared library is at least as strict as the source package dependency on the shared library development package. 19 For our example, the zlib1g
symbols
file would contain:
* Build-Depends-Package: zlib1g-dev
Also see deb-symbols(5).
This can be determined by using the command
readelf -d /usr/lib/libz.so.1.2.3.4 | grep SONAME
An example of where this may be needed is with a library that implements the libGL interface. All GL implementations provide the same set of base interfaces, and then may provide some additional interfaces only used by programs that require that specific GL implementation. So, for example, libgl1-mesa-glx may use the following symbols
file:
libGL.so.1 libgl1
| libgl1-mesa-glx #MINVER#
publicGlSymbol@Base 6.3-1 [...]
implementationSpecificSymbol@Base 6.5.2-7 1
[...]
Binaries or shared libraries using only publicGlSymbol
would depend only on libgl1
(which may be provided by multiple packages), but ones using implementationSpecificSymbol
would get a dependency on libgl1-mesa-glx (>= 6.5.2-7)
.
This field should normally not be necessary, since if the behavior of any symbol has changed, the corresponding symbol minimal-version should have been increased. But including it makes the symbols
system more robust by tightening the dependency in cases where the package using the shared library specifically requires at least a particular version of the shared library development package for some reason.
8.6.3.3. Providing a symbols
file
If your package provides a shared library, you should arrange to include a symbols
control file following the format described above in that package. You must include either a symbols
control file or a shlibs
control file.
Normally, this is done by creating a symbols
in the source package named debian/package.symbols
or debian/symbols
, possibly with .arch
appended if the symbols information varies by architecture. This file may use the extended syntax documented in dpkg-gensymbols(1). Then, call dpkg-gensymbols
as part of the package build process. It will create symbols
files in the package staging area based on the binaries and libraries in the package staging area and the symbols
files in the source package. 20
Packages that provide symbols
files must keep them up-to-date to ensure correct dependencies in packages that use the shared libraries. This means updating the symbols
file whenever a new public symbol is added, changing the minimal-version field whenever a symbol changes behavior or signature in a backward-compatible way (see Shared library ABI changes), and changing the library-soname and main-dependency-template, and probably all of the minimal-version fields, when the library changes SONAME
. Removing a public symbol from the symbols
file because it’s no longer provided by the library normally requires changing the SONAME
of the library. See Run-time shared libraries for more information on SONAME
s.
If you are using debhelper
, dh_makeshlibs
will take care of calling either dpkg-gensymbols
or generating a shlibs
file as appropriate.
8.6.4. The shlibs
system
The shlibs
system is a simpler alternative to the symbols
system for declaring dependencies for shared libraries. It may be more appropriate for C++ libraries and other cases where tracking individual symbols is too difficult. It predated the symbols
system and is therefore frequently seen in older packages. It is also required for udebs, which do not support symbols
.
In the following sections, we will first describe where the various shlibs
files are to be found, then how to use dpkg-shlibdeps
, and finally the shlibs
file format and how to create them.
8.6.4.1. The shlibs
files present on the system
There are several places where shlibs
files are found. The following list gives them in the order in which they are read by dpkg-shlibdeps
. (The first one which gives the required information is used.)
debian/shlibs.local
This lists overrides for this package. This file should normally not be used, but may be needed temporarily in unusual situations to work around bugs in other packages, or in unusual cases where the normally declared dependency information in the installed shlibs
file for a library cannot be used. This file overrides information obtained from any other source.
/etc/dpkg/shlibs.override
This lists global overrides. This list is normally empty. It is maintained by the local system administrator.
DEBIAN/shlibs
files in the “build directory”
These files are generated as part of the package build process and staged for inclusion as control files in the binary packages being built. They provide details of any shared libraries included in the same package.
shlibs
control files for packages installed on the system
The shlibs
control files for all the packages currently installed on the system. These files can be read using dpkg-query --control-show package shlibs
.
/etc/dpkg/shlibs.default
This file lists any shared libraries whose packages have failed to provide correct shlibs
files. It was used when the shlibs
setup was first introduced, but it is now normally empty. It is maintained by the dpkg
maintainer.
If a symbols
file for a shared library package is available, dpkg-shlibdeps
will always use it in preference to a shlibs
, with the exception of debian/shlibs.local
. The latter overrides any other shlibs
or symbols
files.
8.6.4.2. The shlibs
File Format
Each shlibs
file has the same format. Lines beginning with #
are considered to be comments and are ignored. Each line is of the form:
[type: ]library-name soname-version dependencies ...
We will explain this by reference to the example of the zlib1g
package, which (at the time of writing) installs the shared library /usr/lib/libz.so.1.2.3.4
.
type
is an optional element that indicates the type of package for which the line is valid. The only type currently in use is udeb
. The colon and space after the type are required.
library-name
is the name of the shared library, in this case libz
. (This must match the name part of the soname, see below.)
soname-version
is the version part of the ELF SONAME
attribute of the library, determined the same way that the soversion component of the recommended shared library package name is determined. See Run-time shared libraries for the details.
dependencies
has the same syntax as a dependency field in a binary package control file. It should give details of which packages are required to satisfy a binary built against the version of the library contained in the package. See Syntax of relationship fields for details on the syntax, and Shared library ABI changes for details on how to maintain the dependency version constraint.
In our example, if the last change to the zlib1g
package that could change behavior for a client of that library was in version 1:1.2.3.3.dfsg-1
, then the shlibs
entry for this library could say:
libz 1 zlib1g (>= 1:1.2.3.3.dfsg)
This version restriction must be new enough that any binary built against the current version of the library will work with any version of the shared library that satisfies that dependency.
As zlib1g also provides a udeb containing the shared library, there would also be a second line:
udeb: libz 1 zlib1g-udeb (>= 1:1.2.3.3.dfsg)
8.6.4.3. Providing a shlibs
file
To provide a shlibs
file for a shared library binary package, create a shlibs
file following the format described above and place it in the DEBIAN
directory for that package during the build. It will then be included as a control file for that package. 21
Since dpkg-shlibdeps
reads the DEBIAN/shlibs
files in all of the binary packages being built from this source package, all of the DEBIAN/shlibs
files should be installed before dpkg-shlibdeps
is called on any of the binary packages.
This is what dh_makeshlibs
in the debhelper suite does. If your package also has a udeb that provides a shared library, dh_makeshlibs
can automatically generate the udeb:
lines if you specify the name of the udeb with the --add-udeb
option.